Facebook India Vice President Moves Supreme Court Against Summons Issued By Delhi Assembly Committee Looking Into Delhi Riots
Facebook India Vice President Ajit Mohan has moved the Supreme Court challenging the summons issued by the Delhi Assembly's "Peace and Harmony" Committee, which is looking into Facebook's alleged failure to track down hate-speech. Mohan has stated that this issue falls within the exclusive domain of the Union of India.The assembly panel on peace and harmony is looking into complaints on the...
Facebook India Vice President Ajit Mohan has moved the Supreme Court challenging the summons issued by the Delhi Assembly's "Peace and Harmony" Committee, which is looking into Facebook's alleged failure to track down hate-speech. Mohan has stated that this issue falls within the exclusive domain of the Union of India.
The assembly panel on peace and harmony is looking into complaints on the "role or complicity of Facebook officials in the Delhi riots" that took place in February 2020.
Mohan was issued two summonses on August 31, 2020 and the second, on September 18, 2020.
The petitioner has clarified that although he does not seek judicial review of a State Legislature's right to merely discuss issues outside of its legislative competence, so long as it does not seek to exercise power over non-members, however, "when an enquiry into a subject matter over which the Legislature lacks jurisdiction extends beyond its members – whether by summoning non-members at the threat of sanctions for refusing to appear, or by directing agencies to take actions against those non-members – the matter is amenable to judicial review. Petitioners submit that those precise circumstances are present here and require this Hon'ble Court's intervention".
It is averred that the Committee improperly seeks to exercise its powers and privileges in a manner that exceeds the constitutional limits of the Legislative Assembly.
Mohan states that the Committee has summoned him and threatened to hold him in breach of the Committee's privileges if he does not appear and give testimony. In this context, he submits that there is no law that empowers a State Legislature, including a committee formed by that Legislature, to take coercive action against any person unless it obstructs or impedes its legislative functions. "The rights and liberties of persons are protected by Part III of the Constitution, particularly Articles 14, 19 and 21, and coercive action cannot be taken against any citizen unless that action has been authorised by law," the petition reads.
Further, on the aspect of impinging upon the exclusive jurisdiction of the Union of India in this regard, the plea states that Committee is seeking to make a "determination of the veracity of allegations levelled against Facebook" in the Delhi riots, which intrudes into subjects exclusively allocated to the Union of India.
"Regulation of Intermediaries, including in connection with the Facebook service, falls within the exclusive domain of the Union of India under Entry "communication" in the Union List (Entry 31 of List I of the Seventh Schedule). Parliament, in exercise of these powers, enacted the Information Technology Act, 2000 to regulate intermediaries. Any assessment of the veracity of allegations against Petitioner No. 3 as an intermediary is exclusively a Union subject" - Excerpt of Plea
In this perspective, the plea puts forth that by targeting the Facebook service – a platform that allows users to express themselves – the Impugned Summonses create a chilling effect on the free speech rights of users of the Facebook service.
The petitioner formulates the following questions for consideration of the Court:-
1) Whether the privileges of Respondent No. 1, the Legislative Assembly of the NCT of Delhi, include the power to compel the appearance of non-members before Respondent No. 1 to express their views or subject them to examination?
2) Whether the constitutional right to free speech and expression includes the right to silence, and whether compelling a person to speak violates the right to free speech and the right to privacy, which this Hon'ble Court recognized as a fundamental right in K.S. Puttaswamy v. Union of India, (2017) 10 SCC 1?
3) If the answer to question two is in the affirmative, whether the privileges of a State Legislature can be applied in a manner that would violate Part III of the Constitution?
4) Whether a Committee of the Legislative Assembly of the NCT of Delhi can compel witnesses to testify with respect to "public order" and "police" in the NCT of Delhi, in contravention of Articles 239 and 239AA(3)(a) of the Constitution of India, which confer the power to regulate "public order" and "police" in the NCT of Delhi exclusively with the Union of India?
5) Whether a Committee of the State Legislature can compel witnesses to testify on the issue of "communication", which is within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Union of India (Entry 31 of List I of Seventh Schedule of the Constitution of India)?
The petition has been filed by Advocate Mayank Pandey.
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